After that came overtime, cut corners, skipped comforts, and me pretending none of it was hard.
I didn’t mind that part. I minded him ever thinking he had to stop because of me.
Then came graduation.
Jack was one of the student speakers. That mattered later, though I did not know it yet.
I just thought it meant I had to sit through more speeches before hearing his name.
He had texted me that morning.
Do not be late.
I replied, I raised you. That’s rude.
Without admitting defeat, he just shot back, Also sit near the front.
Bossy, I sulked.
Learned from the best.
The auditorium was packed. Families with flowers, balloons, cameras, and tissues.
I sat where he told me to sit and tried not to cry before anything had even happened.
When they started calling names, I clapped for people I did not know. When they called Jack’s, I stood with everyone else.
He crossed the stage, took his diploma cover, and then moved to the podium for the student remarks.
That was normal. That was planned.
That was why nobody stopped him.
He thanked the professors. Thanked classmates. Made one joke that got a real laugh.
Then his tone changed.
“There is one more person I need to thank,” he said.
I felt something in my stomach tighten.
He looked straight at me.
“Mom, will you come up here?”
Every head near me turned.
I didn’t move at first. He had never liked public attention. Neither had I.
He knew that.
Then he said, softer, “Please.”
So I stood.
By the time I got to the stage, my face was burning. Jack met me near the podium and took my hand for a second.
